President Truman's
Broadcast
on Surrender of Germany
(May 8, 1945)
This is a solemn but a glorious hour.
General Eisenhower informs me that the forces of Germany have
surrendered to the United Nations. The flags of freedom fly over all
Europe.
For this victory, we join in offering our
thanks to the Providence which has guided and sustained us through the
dark days of adversity.
Our rejoicing is sobered and subdued by a
supreme consciousness of the terrible price we have paid to rid the
world of Hitler and his evil band. Let us not forget, my fellow
Americans, the sorrow and the heartbreak which today abide in the homes
of so many of our neighbors-neighbors whose most priceless possession
has been rendered as a sacrifice to redeem our liberty.
We can repay the debt which we owe to our
God, to our dead, and to our children only by work-by ceaseless devotion
to the responsibilities which lie ahead of us. If I could give you a
single watchword for the coming months, that word is-work, work, work.
We must work to finish the war. Our
victory is but half won. The West is free, but the East is still in
bondage to the treacherous tyranny of the Japanese. When the last
Japanese division has surrendered unconditionally, then only will our
fighting job be done.
We must work to bind up the wounds of a
suffering world-to build an abiding peace, a peace rooted in justice and
in law. We can build such a peace only by hard, toilsome, painstaking
work-by understanding and working with our Allies in peace as we have in
war.
The job ahead is no less important, no
less urgent, no less difficult than the task which now happily is done.
I call upon every American to stick to
his post until the last battle is won. Until that day, let no man
abandon his post or slacken his efforts.
And now, I want to read to you my formal
proclamation of this occasion:
By the President of the
United States of America
A Proclamation
The Allied Armies, through sacrifice and
devotion and with God's help, have wrung from Germany a final and
unconditional surrender. The western world has been freed of the evil
forces which for five years and longer have imprisoned the bodies and
broken the lives of millions upon millions of free-born men. They have
violated their churches, destroyed their homes, corrupted their
children, and murdered their loved ones. Our Armies of Liberation have
restored freedom to these suffering peoples, whose spirit and will the
oppressors could never enslave.
Much remains to be done. The victory won
in the West must now be won in the East. The whole world must be
cleansed of the evil from which half the world has been freed. United,
the peace-loving nations have demonstrated in the West that their arms
are stronger by far than the might of dictators or the tyranny of
military cliques that once called us soft and weak. The power of our
peoples to defend themselves against all enemies will be proved in the
Pacific war as it has been proved in Europe.
For the triumph of spirit and of arms
which we have won, and for its promise to peoples everywhere who join us
in the love of freedom, it is fitting that we, as a nation, give thanks
to Almighty God, who has strengthened us and given us the victory.
Now, THEREFORE, I, HARRY S. TRUMAN,
President of the United States of America, do hereby appoint Sunday, May
13, 1945, to be a day of prayer.
I call upon the people of the United
States, whatever their faith, to unite in offering joyful thanks to God
for the victory we have won and to pray that He will support us to the
end of our present struggle and guide us into the way of peace.
I also call upon my countrymen to
dedicate this day of prayer to the memory of those who have given their
lives to make possible our victory.
IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto set
my hand and caused the seal of the United States of America to be
affixed.
DONE at the City of Washington this
eighth day of May, in the year of our Lord nineteen hundred and
forty-five, and of the Independence of the United States of America the
one hundred and sixty-ninth.
[SEAL]
HARRY S. TRUMAN
By the President:
JOSEPH C. GREW
Acting Secretary of State
Sources: United States
Department of State Bulletin
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